UCAS Points Calculator 2025/26
Select your qualification type, subject and grade to calculate your total UCAS tariff points. See course eligibility and personalised university recommendations based on your subjects.
How UCAS Tariff Points Work
The UCAS Tariff Points System is the UK's standardised method for comparing different qualifications when applying to university. Introduced in its current form in 2017, the tariff assigns numerical values to qualifications and grades, creating a common scale that universities use to set entry requirements.
Whether you hold A-Levels, BTECs, T-Levels, Scottish Highers, an International Baccalaureate or an Access to HE Diploma, your qualifications can be converted into tariff points and combined to produce a single total.
Why UCAS Points Matter for 2025/26 Entry
- University entry requirements — most universities specify a minimum points threshold (e.g. "112–128 UCAS points")
- Clearing & Adjustment — your total determines which courses remain available in August
- Scholarship eligibility — many bursaries require specific point thresholds
- Comparing qualification routes — a BTEC D*D*D* (168 pts) equals A-Level A*A*A* (168 pts)
- Combining qualifications — you can add A-Levels, AS-Levels, EPQ and BTECs together
Not every university uses tariff points. Some, particularly Oxbridge and highly selective courses, specify exact grades (e.g. "A*AA in specific subjects"). Always check individual course pages for precise requirements.
A-Level UCAS Points Table 2025/26
A-Levels remain the most common route to UK universities. Students typically take three A-Levels over two years in Year 12 and 13.
| Grade | UCAS Points | 3 A-Level Total | Typical University Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| A* | 56 | A*A*A* = 168 | Oxbridge, Imperial, LSE |
| A | 48 | AAA = 144 | Top Russell Group |
| B | 40 | BBB = 120 | Russell Group |
| C | 32 | CCC = 96 | Many excellent universities |
| D | 24 | DDD = 72 | Foundation years, Clearing |
| E | 16 | EEE = 48 | Foundation years, alternative routes |
AS-Level Points: AS-Levels count separately (A = 20, B = 16, C = 12, D = 10, E = 6). They are worth roughly 40% of an A-Level and can boost your total alongside your main qualifications.
BTEC UCAS Points 2025/26
BTECs are vocational qualifications available in various sizes. The Extended Diploma is equivalent to three A-Levels, while the Diploma equals two and the Certificate equals one.
BTEC Extended Diploma (= 3 A-Levels)
| Grade | UCAS Points | A-Level Equivalent |
|---|---|---|
| D*D*D* | 168 | A*A*A* |
| D*D*D | 160 | Above AAA |
| D*DD | 152 | A*AA |
| DDD | 144 | AAA |
| DDM | 128 | ABB |
| DMM | 112 | BBB (approx.) |
| MMM | 96 | CCC |
| MMP | 80 | Below CCC |
| MPP | 64 | DDE (approx.) |
| PPP | 48 | EEE |
BTEC Diploma (= 2 A-Levels)
| Grade | UCAS Points |
|---|---|
| D*D* | 112 |
| D*D | 104 |
| DD | 96 |
| DM | 80 |
| MM | 64 |
| MP | 48 |
| PP | 32 |
BTEC Certificate / Subsidiary Diploma (= 1 A-Level)
| Grade | UCAS Points |
|---|---|
| D* | 56 |
| D | 48 |
| M | 32 |
| P | 16 |
T-Levels, IB, Scottish Highers & Other Qualifications
T-Levels (= 3 A-Levels) — New for 2025/26
T-Levels are the newest addition to the UCAS Tariff, introduced in 2020. They combine classroom learning with a substantial industry placement (minimum 315 hours).
| Grade | UCAS Points | A-Level Equivalent |
|---|---|---|
| Distinction* | 168 | A*A*A* |
| Distinction | 144 | AAA |
| Merit | 96 | CCC |
| Pass (C or above on core) | 72 | DDD |
| Pass (D or E on core) | 48 | EEE |
International Baccalaureate (IB)
The full IB Diploma is graded 24–45 and carries UCAS points based on total score:
| IB Score | UCAS Points | A-Level Equivalent |
|---|---|---|
| 45 (maximum) | 720 | Well above A*A*A* |
| 38–40 | 536–587 | A*A*A equivalent |
| 34–36 | 435–485 | AAA equivalent |
| 30–32 | 336–386 | BBB equivalent |
| 24 (minimum) | 186 | Below CCC |
Note: Individual IB Higher Level subjects also carry points separately (HL7 = 56, HL6 = 48, HL5 = 32, HL4 = 16).
Scottish Qualifications
Scottish Highers (typically 5 subjects in S5):
- Grade A = 33 points
- Grade B = 27 points
- Grade C = 21 points
- Grade D = 15 points
Scottish Advanced Highers (typically 1–3 in S6, equivalent to A-Levels):
- Grade A = 56 points (same as A-Level A*)
- Grade B = 48 points
- Grade C = 40 points
- Grade D = 32 points
Extended Project Qualification (EPQ)
The EPQ is a standalone research project worth up to 28 UCAS points. Many students use it to boost their total:
- A* = 28 points | A = 24 | B = 20 | C = 16 | D = 12 | E = 8
Example boost: 3 A-Levels at ABB (128 pts) + EPQ at A* (28 pts) = 156 total points
Access to HE Diploma
Designed for mature learners (19+) who want to enter higher education without traditional qualifications. Points depend on the number of credits at each grade:
- 45 credits at Distinction = 144 points (equivalent to AAA)
- 30 Distinction + 15 Merit = 126 points
- 45 credits at Merit = 108 points
Cambridge Pre-U
- D1 = 56 pts | D2 = 56 pts | D3 = 56 pts | M1 = 48 pts | M2 = 48 pts | M3 = 40 pts | P1 = 32 pts | P2 = 24 pts | P3 = 16 pts
University Entry Requirements by UCAS Points
Understanding typical requirements helps you target the right universities. Here is a breakdown by tier:
Top Universities: 144–168 points
Russell Group elite & Oxbridge: typically A*AA to A*A*A*
- Oxford & Cambridge: 160–168 points + interview + admissions test
- Imperial College London: 152–168 points (STEM subjects)
- London School of Economics: 152–160 points
- UCL, Durham, Warwick, St Andrews: 144–160 points
These universities usually specify exact grades rather than total points.
Russell Group: 112–144 points
ABB to AAA equivalent
- Edinburgh, Manchester, Birmingham, Leeds, Bristol, Nottingham
- Glasgow, Sheffield, Southampton, Queen Mary London
Popular courses: Law 136–144 | Computer Science 128–136 | Engineering 128–144
Excellent Universities: 96–120 points
BBB to BBC equivalent
- Lancaster, York, Bath, Loughborough, East Anglia, Surrey, Sussex
Popular courses: Business 96–112 | Psychology 104–120 | Nursing 96–112
Many UK Universities: 48–96 points
Over 100 universities accept students in this range. Options include:
- Foundation degrees with progression routes
- Vocational degrees (Creative Arts, Media, Hospitality)
- Foundation years at well-ranked universities
10 Real UCAS Points Examples
See how different qualification combinations convert to total points:
1. Classic A-Levels: AAB = 136 points
Maths A (48) + Physics A (48) + Chemistry B (40) = 136. Qualifies for most Russell Group courses.
2. BTEC Extended Diploma: D*DD = 152 points
Business D*DD = 152. Equivalent to A-Level A*AA. Qualifies for top universities.
3. A-Levels + EPQ: ABB + A* EPQ = 156 points
English A (48) + History B (40) + Psychology B (40) + EPQ A* (28) = 156. EPQ boosted from 128 to 156!
4. Mixed: A-Level + BTEC Diploma = 144 points
Biology A-Level A (48) + BTEC Applied Science DD (96) = 144. Equivalent to AAA.
5. Scottish Highers: AABBC = 141 points
Maths A (33) + English A (33) + Physics B (27) + Chemistry B (27) + History C (21) = 141.
6. A-Levels + AS-Level: ABB + AS A = 148 points
Computer Science A (48) + Maths B (40) + Physics B (40) + AS Further Maths A (20) = 148.
7. Access to HE Diploma: 45 Distinctions = 144 points
Perfect for mature students returning to education. Equivalent to AAA at A-Level.
8. Top Grades: A*A*A = 160 points
Maths A* (56) + Further Maths A* (56) + Physics A (48) = 160. Oxbridge level.
9. T-Level Distinction* = 168 points
T-Level in Digital Production at Distinction* = 168. Same as A*A*A*. Increasingly accepted by top universities.
10. Lower Grades: CCD = 88 points
Art C (32) + Media C (32) + English D (24) = 88. Still qualifies for many universities, foundation years, and Clearing places.
UCAS Application Timeline & Tips for 2025/26
Key Dates for 2026 Entry
- May 2025: UCAS applications open
- 15 October 2025: Deadline for Oxford, Cambridge, Medicine, Dentistry, Veterinary
- 29 January 2026: Main deadline for most courses
- February–May 2026: Universities send offers
- June 2026: Reply to offers (firm and insurance choices)
- August 2026 (Results Day): A-Level results published, Clearing opens
- August–September 2026: Adjustment period
Predicted Grades vs UCAS Points
Universities make conditional offers based on predicted grades from your teachers, not your current points total. Strong Year 12 mocks and coursework lead to better predictions. If your predictions are lower than hoped, consider taking an EPQ to boost your total or applying to universities that accept your predicted range.
Clearing Strategy (70,000+ students each year)
- Prepare early: research backup universities before results day
- Act fast: popular courses fill within hours on results day
- Call directly: phone universities with your UCAS ID and grades ready
- Quality options: even Russell Group universities participate in Clearing
Adjustment (If You Exceed Predictions)
If your results are better than expected, you have a 5-day window to "trade up" to a higher-ranked university while keeping your existing firm offer as backup. Not guaranteed, but worth trying if your grades surpass your original choices significantly.
5 Application Tips
- Apply early — submit October/November rather than waiting until January
- Use your 5 choices wisely — 2 aspirational, 2 realistic, 1 safety
- Check subject requirements — some courses need specific A-Levels (e.g. Chemistry for Medicine)
- Personal statement — 4,000 characters to show passion, experience, and why this subject
- Student finance — apply for loans in March (separate from UCAS)
Official Sources & Methodology
This calculator uses the official UCAS Tariff 2017, which remains current for 2025/26 admissions. All point values are verified against UCAS documentation.
References
Disclaimer: This calculator provides UCAS tariff point equivalents for guidance. Always check specific university course pages for exact entry requirements, as many universities specify grades (e.g. "AAB") rather than total points.
Written by UK Education Specialists
Sources: UCAS Official Tariff Tables 2017 (current), GOV.UK Qualifications Framework, UCAS Undergraduate Application Guide
Last updated:
Next review: September 2026 (2027/28 admissions cycle)
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I calculate my total UCAS points?
Use our calculator above to add each qualification (A-Levels, BTECs, etc.) separately, then the tool sums them automatically. You can add up to 8 qualifications. For example: A-Level Maths A (48) + A-Level English B (40) + A-Level History C (32) = 120 total points.
What UCAS points do I need for a Russell Group university?
Most Russell Group universities require 112–144 UCAS points, equivalent to BBB to AAA at A-Level. Highly competitive courses like Medicine, Law, and Engineering sit at the upper end (136–168 points).
Can I mix A-Levels and BTECs?
Yes. Many students combine qualifications. For example: 1 A-Level at grade A (48 pts) + BTEC Diploma DD (96 pts) = 144 total points, equivalent to AAA. Universities increasingly welcome mixed qualification profiles.
Do all universities use UCAS points?
No. Oxford, Cambridge, and some selective courses specify exact grades (e.g. "A*AA in Maths, Physics, and one other"). Others use a points-based system. Always check the specific course page on the university website.
Are UCAS points the same every year?
The current tariff system was introduced in 2017 and has remained stable. New qualifications (like T-Levels) are added periodically, but existing point values for A-Levels, BTECs, and Scottish qualifications have not changed.